Published: 2004/05/17 23:09:39 GMT
Story from BBC NEWS:
Geological time gets a new period 
Geologists have added a new period to their official calendar of Earth's 
history - the first in 120 years. 
The Ediacaran Period covers some 50 million years of ancient time on our 
planet from 600 million years ago to about 542 million years ago. 
It officially becomes part of the Neoproterozoic, when multi-celled life 
forms started to take hold on Earth. 
However, Russian geologists are unhappy their own title - the Vendian - 
which was coined in 1952, was not chosen. 
The decision was taken after a fifteen-year long period of consideration 
by expert geologists. 
"There's always been a recognition that the last part of the Precambrian 
is a special time before the first shelled animals, when there are these 
mesh-like creatures of uncertain affinity," Professor Jim Ogg, 
secretary-general of the International Commission on Stratigraphy (ICS), 
told BBC News Online. 
"Now it's an official part of the timescale." 
'Snowball' Earth 
The Ediacaran begins at the end of the last ice age of the Snowball Earth, 
or Cryogenian Period, a term given to a series of glaciations that covered 
most of our planet between 850-630 or 600 million years ago. 
One theory proposes that these climate shocks triggered the evolution of 
complex, multi-celled life. 
The proposal had to pass three balloting stages, first by the members of 
the ICS's Terminal Proterozoic Period subcommission (which was set up 
specifically to consider the Ediacaran question), then by the ICS itself 
and finally by the International Union of Geological Sciences (IUGS) which 
ratified the definition in March. 
At each stage, the vote had to be passed by two-thirds of the voting 
members. 
However, Russian geologists are likely to continue to call the period by 
its alternative name: the Vendian. 
In 1952, the Russian geologist Boris Sokolov coined the term Vendian for a 
system of sedimentary rocks in the former Soviet Union. 
The two Russian members of the Terminal Proterozoic Period subcommission 
and Dr Sokolov submitted a formal comment expressing their disappointment 
at the decision to choose the Ediacaran over the Vendian. 
"This decision ignores both the priority of the name Vendian and a long 
tradition to use this term in the international geological literature," 
Sokolov, Mikhail Semikhatov and Mikhail Fedonkin wrote in their comment. 
The name Ediacaran takes its name from the Ediacara Hills in the Flinders 
mountain range of south Australia. The name is of Australian Aboriginal 
origin and refers to a place where water is present. 
The Enorama Creek section of Flinders was designated the "boundary 
stratotype" for the Ediacaran by the Terminal Proterozoic Period 
subcommission. 
A boundary stratotype is a rock sequence defined and used as the standard 
comparison for all other rock sequences of its age. 
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/science/nature/3721481.stm

Published: 2004/05/17 23:09:39 GMT

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